
These eyewitness accounts by Polish soldiers tells their story of the campaign in France in Spring 1814 when Napoleon once again revealed his true genius for waging war. Napoleon finally had to accept defeat and was exiled to Elba with a small contingent of his Imperial Guard including a squadron of the famous Polish Lancers. This handful of loyal Poles returned with him when he escaped from Elba in 1815 and fought during the 100 Days and at Waterloo. They describe vividly the battles, sieges, the agonies of their final surrender and the uncertainties surrounding their return home to a very different Poland.
- Books (Napoleonic and French Revolution)
- The Death of Joachim Murat: 1815 and the Unfortunate Fate of One of Napoleon's Marshals
- Somosierra, 1808
- 1798 and the French Invasion of Ireland
- Polish Eyewitnesses to Napoleon's 1812 Campaign
- Napoleon on Elba
- 1813: Polish Eyewitness Accounts of Napoleon's Campaign in Germany
- To Befriend an Emperor
- War of Lost Hope
- The Napoleon Options
- Polish Eyewitnesses to Napoleon's Campaigns, 1814-1815
- Nelson at Naples
- In the Legions of Napoleon
- Glory and Despair
- With Napoleon in Russia
- With Napoleon's Guard in Russia
- With Napoleon in Egypt: The Recollections of Józef Szumlański
- Killing Napoleon
- Napoleon's Army in Russia
- Napoleon's Mameluke
- Uniforms of Napoleon's Army
- Napoleon's Invasion of Egypt: An Eyewitness History
- Articles (Napoleonic and French Revolution)
- Books (Other)
- Articles (Other)